An extremist, not a fanatic

July 30, 2013

Minimizing misery

The ONS's latest survey of well-being raises a question put in a recent paper by Orsolya Lelkes: should government policy aim at maximizing happiness, or rather at minimizing misery?

She argues for the latter. A good reason for this is that whilst happiness is in large part an idiosyncratic thing, unhappiness is more closely correlated with social conditions, most notably unemployment. For example, today's figures show that the unemployed are almost four times as likely to have low well-being as those in work.

Such a view should be close to consensus. It's consistent with the Rawlsian position that we should maximize the position of worst-off groups. And it's consistent with our concern to protect human rights and prevent crime; crime and rights violations inflict great misery, which is to be avoided.

We might add that liberals of all sorts should prefer minimizing misery to maximizing happiness. It's better that governments focus upon a few social evils than act as a nanny busybodying itself with every detail of our everyday lives; even if libertarian paternalismisn't an oxymoron, it can very quickly lose its libertarianism.

Of course, it would be daft to think governments can eliminate misery - I'm not sure they can or should do much to reduce divorce for example. But there are some things a government concerned to minimize misery would give a higher priority to:-

- Better healthcare generally. Today's figures show that those in bad health are often very unhappy - more so even than the disabled.

- Poverty reduction. This follows from simple diminishing returns; giving £1 to the very poor does more to increase happiness than giving £1 to the rich.

- Racial integration. Black people are almost twice as likely to be very unhappy as whites; Chinese and Indians, though, are less likely to be unahppy.

Curmudgeons might reply at this point that governments should stick to their traditional task of trying to promote prosperity.

But is there a conflict between minimizing misery and raising GDP growth? I'm not sure. For one thing, it could be that long-run growth is much less malleable by conventional policies than thought. And for another, happier people are more productive, more likely to trust others and - being more optimistic - more likely to look for work if they don't have it. In these senses, it could be that policies that aim to minimize misery end up, obliquely, raising GDP.

Whether such policies are feasible under managerialist capitalism is, however, another matter.

Governments can not know what makes individuals happy but they sure as hell know what makes them miserable. Although wealth may not bring happiness, poverty is a universal immiserator. Assymetry perhaps describes this phenomenon.

So yeah, minimising misery hits the spot on so many fronts alluded to in the post!

come on guys, I imagine I share your opinion of the current government's efforts in this direction (cut benefits, increase incentives!), but even this administration hasn't erased all government policies aimed at raising employment.

British people have the smallest amount of housing space per person of any developed country and government policy is to reduce it still more. So I would say the aim of the Cabinet is to increase misery. Infact all their policies seem to have this characteristic.

Luis, that's why I'm interested in any conflicts between policies that maximise happiness and those that minimise misery. Would a government instigate a policy that reduces the happiness of the majority in order to reduce the misery of the minority? Or are they only interested in policies that also improve the happiness of the majority (for example, reducing poverty & unemployment also reduces rioting and crime which increase happiness for the majority).

Plus of course, there's the Tory belief that high unemployment in the North is a price worth paying for prosperity in the South.

Governmen, as an institution, only tries to reduce misery insofar as it is required to to minimise the risk of revolution and/or the overthrow of the current ruling class.

Sometimes they are even explicit about this.

Lets go back to ancient Rome. You had a ruling class which provided subsidized corn in order to pacify the masses.

The same is true of the western welfare states. Introduced during a crisis in capitalism and during a time of revolutions and great uncertainty we see governments trying to pacify the masses with welfare.

Few governments wish to be actively increase misery and few wish to be seen as increasing it, but they have little interest in reducing it further than necessary for stability.
The current technocratic managerial political philosophy does lend itself to providing excuses for increasing misery, as is being ably exploited by the current government (and was by the previous one).

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